Located in a beautifully refurbished plantation superintendent's home, next to Hawaii's last operating sugar mill, the museum exhibits the history and heritage of the sugar industry and the multi-ethnic plantation life it engendered.

The Contemporary Museum, Honolulu, is the only museum in the state of Hawai‘i devoted exclusively to contemporary art. TCM provides an accessible forum for provocative, dynamic forms of visual art, offering interaction with art and artists in a unique Island environment.

Grove Farm preserves the lifestyle of the sugar plantation from the period 1864-1978 and includes the restored Wilcox family home, plantation office, workerÕs houses, extensive grounds and gardens, poultry and livestock.

On the waterfront in historic Kailua-Kona, HuliheÔe Palace was built in 1838 as a home for High Chief Kuakini, governor of the island of HawaiÔi. Today it is restored and furnished to reflect the lifestyle of the Hawaiian royalty in the late 1800s.

Built in 1882, Iolani Palace was the official residence of King Kalakaua and Queen Liliuokalani, the last monarchs of Hawaii. The site of coronations, lavish social events and political turmoil, the Palace has been elegantly and meticulously restored with original royal furnishings.

Built in 1833 on land that once was part of the royal compound of Kahekili, last chief of Maui, the Bailey House was once part of a school for Hawaiian girls and was the home of missionary teachers Edward and Caroline Bailey. The Bailey House is now a museum showcasing Hawaiian culture, artifacts, paintings and furnishings from 19th century Maui.

Guided tours of three historic houses, exhibits and demonstrations of printing introduce the daily life and work of American missionaries and their influential role in HawaiÔiÕs history. Be sure to visit the Mission Cemetery and KawaiahaÔo Church, built

The U.S.S. Arizona Memorial Museum is the final resting place for many of the shipÕs 1,177 crewmen who lost their lives on December 7, 1941. Your visit includes a twenty-minute documentary film and a shuttle boat ride to the Memorial which spans the mid-

This small museum immerses you in the history and culture of HawaiÔiÕs old sugar plantation communities. The Plantation Lifestyles Tours visits the adjoining plantation camp with its original dirt lanes, workerÕs housing, fruit trees and home gardens.